PAGE BIGHT. “iL De eG | I A | ii WIEN} orse Blankets Wear The Longest They can’t help it. Wear is bred into them. It took us years to learn how, but we stuck at it; now our 5A Blankets stand supreme-- they outwear three ordinary blankets. Every 5A Blanket is closely woven from the strongest, tightest-twisted yarns our expert spinners can make. And it is all done to save you money—to make one blanket do the work of three—to save you trouble and expense. 6A Horse Blankets are sold by the largest horse-blanket factory in the world direct to your dealer. Here, again, we save you money by cutting out all jobbers’ commissions. You pay but one profit. The 5A Storm King is the most popular medium-priced square blanket on the market. Extra large, extra thick, extra strong, extra warm. Weighs 8 lbs., measures 84 x 90 inches. Price only worth twice as much. See them before you buy any other. Buy a 8A Square Blanket for street use. Buy a 5A Bias Girth Blanket for stabs ashy Buy a 5A Plush Robe for carriage or auto, WM. AYRES & SONS, Philadelphia, Pa. — mmm of inferiority or effeminacy. In the triumphal processions of the Caesars, | for example, prisoners of war wore | them as a sign of defeat, while the sturdy legs of Roman's victorious le- | gions were bare below the bottom of | the ted or kilted coat of mail. For the last hundred years or there- about trousers have been widely rec- ognized as the garments of authority, the outward and visible sign of the stronger sex, says the American Tail- or and Cutter. But that position has not been won or maintained without a struggle. attempts have been made to trample down the tyranny of trousers, as their rule has been called; many times has their superiority been challenged. But so far their position remains secure. BEER BARREL Used in English Army Maneuvers for the Construction of a Foot Bridge. CENTENARY OF THE TROUSER Jt Was Napoleon's Victorious Legions Who Brought That Garment Into Fashion. As nearly as can be ascertained it fs a hundred years since Napoleon Bonaparte’s soldiers introduced the old-new style of leg wear which speed- fly secured recognition as the distine- tively masculine garment of civilians throughout two continents. In 1814—the year before Waterloo it was related as a current news ftem of some importance that the great duke of Wellington had been re- fused admittance to Almack’s in Lon- don, because he presented himself wearing trousers instead of the con- wentional breeches which the dress regulations then in vogue demanded. As a matter of historical fact trous- ers have been worn by various races and by both sexes in all the ages of which any authentic records exist. Generally speaking, trousers were re- garded in ancient times as symbolical Many re ST WY STR TY > | AERIS “lI Got This Fine Pipe With Liggett & Myers Duke’s Mixture” All kinds of men smoke Duke’s Mixture in all kinds of pipes-—as well as in cigarettes—and they all tell the same story They like the genuine, natural tobacco taste of 2g ell ¥ A BER EN — » Choice bright leaf aged to mellow mildness, carefully stemmed end then granulated—every grain pure, high-grade tobacco— that’s what you get in the Liggett & Myers Duke’s Mixture sack, You get one and a half ounces of this pure, mild, delightful tobacco, unsurpassed in quality. for 6c—and with each sack you get a book of papers free Now About the Free Pipe Inevery sack of Liggett & Myers Duke’s Mixture we now pack acoupon You can exchange these coupons for a pipe or for many other valuable and useful articles. These presents cost not one penny There is something for every member of the family- skates. catcher’s gloves, tennis rackets, cameras, toilet articles, ¢ait ~uses. canes, umbrellas. and dozens of other things Just send us your name and address on a postal and as a special offer during Octo- ber and November only we will send you our new illustrated cata- logue of presents FREE cof any charge. Open up a sack of Liggett & Myers Duke’s Mixture today. NV ENE WEENIE Coupons from Duke's Mixture may be assorted with tags from HORSE SHOE, J. T., TINSLEY’'S NATURAL LEAF, GRANGER TWIST, and Coupons from UR ROSES (loc tin double coupon). PICK PLUG CUT, PIEDMONT CIGA- RETTES, CLIX CIGARETTES, and other tags or coupons 1ssued by us. TREN Premium Dept. I = | | commandeered THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. getting across country, despite fire, ball, snow and vapor, was illustrated by a fine plece of handy-man work during field training at Aldershot, Eng: land, recently, s The Third Infantry brigade found it. self obliged to retire. The enemy were too strong in front. Unfortu. nately, however, the Basingstoke canal stretched behind them This was the chance the Second Jssex had been looking for. They hay from a neighbor it into five-foot ing stack, lashed | square bales, wrapped these in tar | paulin wagon covers, and moored the | tato crop of 1911 | tween | els, | 000,000 bushels that were sent to the | starch completed articles like rafts in the wa- ter. Planks stretched from one to the other enabled the whole battalion to cross over in single file. Meanwhile the Second Middlesex, not to be beaten, borrowed half a doz- en empty beer barrels from an inn and made a light foot bridge. The Somerset Light infantry find- ing plenty of cut timber in Pyestock wood, made a fairly substantial tres. tle bridge in less than two hours, across which all the vehicles of the brigade were passed, the battalion fol lowing in fours, The Second Border regiment also constructed a light barrel bridge, and the whole brigade crossed the canal, | thanks to their handy men, without mishap, the rear guard destroying the bridges. Maine's Greatest Crop. The total sale of the Aroostook po- is estimated at be- 15,000,000 bush- 2,000,000 and 14,000,000 and leaving betwen 3, factories, used for seed and food purposes here in the country or lost. It is figured that for crops sold the average price was over $2 a barrel. This means that Aroostook received for the crop of potatoes which it raised in 1911 between $1,650,000 and $1,800,000. The exceptionally good year has encouraged the farm- ers, and their plans show that there will be no shrinkage of the acreage this season. It will not be increased, however, to any appreciable extent. Most of the Aroostook farmers be- lieve that the time has come to stop increasing the acreage and to devote themselves to the problem of secur- ing further increase of the yield ar acre. PET AVERSION OF THE SAILOR | Stormy Petrel Is Regarded with Dis- | favor by Even the Most Stout. Hearted Seamen. | There are few persons who have crossed the ocean that have not ob- served the stormy petrel skimming along the surface of the water. They flit past the vessel like swallows, tak- ing their scanty portion of food from the waves. S IN WARFARE | “The way they have in the army” of | | and rear the young on pieces of flot- sam. That mysterious origin has giv- | appearance generally in larger Habited in black and making their nums- bers just previous to, or during, a storm, they have long been regarded , br the superstitious not only as fore- boding messengers, but as agents in some way responsible for bad weather. Nobody can tell where they come from: or where they breed. Sailors as- gert they hatch the egg under the wing en rice to an opinion prevalent among mariners that they are in some way connected with the supernatural agen- cies of the air. They are variously known as stormy petrels, witch birds, the devil's birds and Mother Carey’s chickens. Their sudden appearance often makes the stoutest hearted seaman flinch. SALE REGISTER { A Nctice in This List is Read by Sev= which eral Thousand People Weekly a list of sales for Following is posters have been printed this FREE or paper until are advertised in notices are given r of sale. rin Hotel, Pa., two ground wit} le prem- yYtown » hons all ontbhuildir in (cel Catharine repair by | Kautz. Zeller I Thursday, Oct. 3—On the prem-| |ises in the village of Florin, 3 lots lof ground, with frame house, frame | stable, carpenter shop and outbuild- | by Benj. L. Garber. Zeller. Friday, Oct. 4—At Gantz’s Stock and colts from {years old and weighing to 1400 pounds, by D. Zeller, Co. Wednesday, horses 2 ta5 from 1000 Kieffer & ern 3 3. y E auct. Oct. Joy 9—On the pr Borough, en- ises in Mt. on vements, a lot of {ground Haven Al A New impr so a large lot of perscnal property Henry by Ebercole, Mrs. Hemsley and Heirs of Noah Zeller, E. Ebersole, Howard Ebersole, N. deceased. Auct. Thursday, Oct. -In Central Hall at Marietta, a large lot of real estate such as lots in Marietta bor- in Rapho townships, and and bank stock 3urd Cassel and George 1 M. D., executors of Mary Jane Cas- 10- East of H. and a lot bv oagh, farms Donegal turnpike Cassel, deceased. Also a lot of real estate by George L. Cassel, M. D. C. H. Zeller, auct. sel and heirs of Abraham N. Oct. 12-—On the prem- ises in Rapho township, a farm of 163 perches with all Also tenant house, Saturday, near New- acres and improvements; stable, etc., town, 28 by - [Samuel S. street with! Mrs. Lavinia] Cassel, | and Christian 8 the de Greider administrators estate of Martin 1. Greider, Zeller, Auct, Oct. 17 Joy borough, Greider ol ceased Thursday, On the prem lises in Mt a fine brick warehouse dwelling, large brick | [frame implement warehouse, et in the Sherk Hempfield S and one-fourth West Samuel S. mterest Ore Bank in Town Greider ship Christian by and administrators Greider, {of the estate of Martin deceased, Zeller, Auct, | ee el Greider Eentiments That the Scoldisr Assocls ates With the Flag Have Turned Many Battles. Instance after {instance could de. quoted from military history in which the mere sight of tl} in- the colors has #pired men and carried them to ulti- mate victory when the tide of battle appeared to have turned against them and all seemed lost. Creat generals have themselves taken the colors in their hands and rallied their forces to supreme effort in the hour of trial. Obviously it was not the mere piece of tattered silk that wrought these wonders; it was the sentiment insep« arably associated with the colors that acted as the spell. We know, too, that the capture or the loss of colors has always been ass pigned a vital importance by the world's greatest commanders, be- cause they knew that these regimen- tal emblems typified all that thelr ! possessors held most dear—prestige, honor, victory. Y.et any man visit | Napoleon's tomb at the Invalides, and, | taking on hour, gaze down into the the solemn spirit of the | circular | shrine in which lies the huge porphyry | sarcophagus containing the body of ! | the great captain whose legions made | all Europe tremble. Apart from the sarcophagus itself, what is it that most impresses nine out of every ten spectators? Surely the stands of col ors—the trophies of war—that stand grouped round the tomb. They are the mutely eloquent witnesses to the greatness of the man whose dust rests | in their midst.—IL.ondon Telegraph. FROM AN AUSTRALIAN DIARY Voracious Ants of All Kinds—One Species that Evinces Fondness for Sheet Lead. About noon it got too hot for any: thing and I took a well earned swim in a secluded creek, amid shoals of fish, large and small, who apparently resented my intrusion, from the way they came and stared at me. I found on emerging from the water that a host of blue brown ants had taken possession of my clothes, and ! when they were shaken out they re- venged themselves by biting my bare feet in a way which was exceedingly painful. There are thousands of ants every: where, says a writer in the Gentle: woman. Some of the anthills are three feet high and six feet across— bit except for a sharp nip at the time, tte ordinary ant’s bite is not notice« But if a soldier ant or a bull ant a green head (an ant about one ang atle, or | a half inches long, with a green head) bites you, it is not to be forgotten, be- ¢. 18e they take quite a big piece out. Then there are the white ants (not ~ally ants, but termites), which cheerfully eat the inside out of the beams of the wooden houses, and re- cently have been eating the sheet lead the top of the Sydney museum. The c’'y fathers thought this was going a little far, so now the ants are pre- of the half consumed lead as warning to all who allow their appe- es to run away with them. Tles it Isn't Veneer That Really Counts. it's what a man is, not what he has, which makes him a real man, after all, Acquired powers have their fas- cination, it must i but, compared with genuine are not important. Which do you wish— the ability of a husband to swear at you in seven langt es, or a loving- tenderness that will prompt your hus- band to speak words of sympathy to You in commonplace accents? Are You contemplating living with clever- ness that can cut you to the heart, or be admitted, qualities, with a great tenderness of nature that | can sympathize? Technical facilities, encyclopedic ins | formation, polished manners, all ac- quired points, usually attract a wom- an. They are veneers, and the wise girl will look beneath. A continental | bow, a polite speech of apology with a French phrase thrown in, can never counterbalance the black eye given in a blind rage. Corner on Idols. H. E. Huntington of Pasadena, Cal., a Oe. HE For a re > ee | has done a foolish reactionary thing. ! jyarcs, t. Joy, a carload of west-| He has bought 57 idols, brought them from their original Japanese temple, | {timely rain | { | | | | | League held | | | guest of Levi Shuman, {and other friends in our town. Mr, | Eby i man {and a | Eby | present time. | | | | | 88 eR ‘INSPIRATION OF THE COLORS | | many. i their { uplif¢ Sulcidal Habit of Butterfly, Considerable interest attaches to a migration of butterflies to this coun. try from the continent which recently took place, remarks the London Stand. ard, The migration sisted chie of the Yellow" and Lady ‘he extraond story is this, that n cles will ever get th winter All tr gleep from Octo! erpill fn question con Clouded Painted of the 1y pretty the wellknown { part t spe y British tterflies t thy i ther elther cal gs, rl the Painted Lad France again t¢ for a north waiting for that such a wind variably too col upon this theory. is another victin tion. Red ir suicidal migra. The !Hluminati. INMuminati 11d be called in these days tionalists,” or “Free- | thinkers,” or “Liberals.” Founded in Spain about 1575, the order or sect or whatever you may to call it, | spread over all Europe, becoming es- pecially strong in and Ger They claimed that truth, and the proofs of it, were internal, to be found in the reas and conscience, rather than in the ir works of things, such as creeds, forms and acts. The rationalism of the I 1inati was, as Matthew Arnold would say, “tinged with emotion,” being a combination of rationalism and mysticis The pogition of the church was strong, the first of the Illuminati paid usual penalty of being ‘“unortho WoO The choose France mn out in op- and the rr eens tl -- eeesasenae SALUNGA Read the Bulletin county The | the | the housed. Tobacco throughout one-half help is only about will to lessen labor of seeding. The Circle of the Church God on Daisy held Saturday successful festi- A of a very val sum evening. neat | was realized, Epworth num- | On Sunday night the a rally before a ber of visitors who were repaid for! attendance by the spiritual for all present. | | Hershey is the! Eby Mr. Simon Eby of Samuel ! | | was a well-known business) Mt. has several years Mr. Joy at ago | Samuel | the} | class Col-| lege w rather, One | hundred young men at the different | for of Joy brother, in Mt. ¢ 1 residing rush at Delaware rather Our ’as fierce. ends of a rope each class trying { possession certainly amounts to a | { ler, | numbers . scrved inside the museum with sam- | af- the ined fierce struggle. The Sophs won Freshman on with ter leaving one field ankle. a spra cripnled was the time for rally in the and the Sunday morning the E. that and friends was certeinly a credit | Miss superintendent School M. Sunday Church, Salunga, rally was presented to the visitors | Striek-| of to 1 concerned. Alice the certainly and school to al the! St the | school, knows how ge the children. attention of at pupils and, interest The some present ninety Qunday School work is progressing in our town. | ia] il we 111 101 1 1 ®t bc] | IE | and installed them in his grounds so | | that he can worship Buddha in seclu- | sion. been if he had got statues of some of the American idols and put them up so that the populace might wor- ehip. He could have several political favorites, Mammon, two or three base- | ball heroes, several moving plcture How much better it would have | cowboys, a ten-foot statue of an Amer- | | ican silver dollar, a leading vaudeville | nctress, an aviator, a fat hog for Chi- | = | cago, Kansas City and Omaha visi- | tors, and statues of a bull moose, an | elephant and a donkey.—Pennsylvania | Grit. Preserving Their Morals. ‘When the fuse blew out for the fifth | | time in five minutes the woman who, with her four small children, occupied the seat nearest the motorman, clam- | ored for assistance in removing her brood to a seat in the rear of the car. | “You needn't go to all that trouble, | madam,” said an old gentleman reas- | suringly. “There is no danger. You are just as safe here as in any other | part of the car.” “Oh, I'm not afraid,” she said. “I | want to get the children away some place where they can't hear the mo- |° torman.” | i; 1] RE 11 1 a [54 i HE DRAEEELEEEE IEE FETE LE RL. [ful the 11 1 on a0 Wednesday, September th, 1912 100 PPO 0000 Western Horses and Colts at PUBLIC SALE FRIDAY, OCT. 4, 1912 AT 1.30 At Wm. Gantz’s Stock Yards at The Farmers lan Hotel Mt. Joy 1 Carload of Extra Good, Fresh Western Horses and Colts "BIMEEIETE RB These ally 1 Colts our the for were hought Ww, W, stock farms in the person- man, Grove from some of hest West, this market, the two good the kind conformation, I'hey consist of good, big, with ends with rugged kind and and and a middle plenty of style Will this Greys have some good mated teams and shippers load in Browns The in Bays, kind the city are all looking foi when finished. good all purpose chunks and some chancy drivers. range in age from 2 to 5 years and weighing lbs, each Colts Grove Coits are 1100 d of fitable all ad- with chance Mr, the any don’t miss this as you the to buy, Grove vises us that he has an extra good load of Colts, kind size, shape and bone ail over, for 30, 90 days will be taken, GO or . Zeller, Auct. H. Zeller, Clerk, D. B. Kieffer G Co. 0 EEE = Take & day Off NEXT WEEK for the GREAT LANCASTER FAIR Original, Instruc- ———— Many new and startling features. tive and Entertaining Fxhibits. See Dare Devil Harry Six, the Blind Folded Diver The Great Kings and Queens of the Air The Lukens Seven in a Wonderful Act The Diving girls, the Ostrich Farm, the Trained Ani- mals, the Ocean Wave, the Ferris Wheel and a Hundred Others EXCITING RACES EVERY DAY Come Early in the Day With the Whole Family Special Railroad Service Every 20 Minutes. ADMISSION 25 CENTS. The GREAT LANCASTER FAIR October 1-2-3-4 the squirrels! squirrels Save The beauti-| s Wednesday when the 5 1a 1] ; : the Capitol} building tame that! q : ¥ Sonmsting of | ive members namely Mr. Bender of Strasburg, A. M. Lehman of Lan- Wm. Shenberger of Colum- Samuel Eby and Dr, B. E. The Work will so as to be fin- sets in. build- the permanently in there at all morning grey on : } committee sO around the and fear running some Grounds have become in roads by they hop on vicinity ing they are account of the hunting season. Mrs. Miller was in we so do- a caster, TISR O10 hie, and Salunga. this fall cold completion | Kendig, Rohrers- | Mennonite | Tuesday of buried the Landisville Henry be pushed weather the before the the Superintendent Grounds will the building and seasons, ished town Cemetery at After of afternoon. The i.andisville hold a jing, of the reside will Control of Association the Board of Camp on be meeting grounds on 110110 0 Here's The Shoe Opportunity Of The Season We are determined not to carry a pair over the sea- son of our large stock of Summer Footwear. tional values in all lines. Excep- Yours for business 0 West Main Street, Mount Joy a I! J \ 4 »